Despite our big desires, needs, and our endless thirst for more, there are times that simple things like a Starbucks drink become enough, become satisfying.
Lately I’ve been hungry more often than usual. I cannot stop eating. I want the cookies that I always avoid. I want the chocolates that I try not to look at. I want big pizzas and I don’t care for calories. But I’ve been hungry not just for food, but for dreams too, the dreams ones I’m too impatient to get to.
I was very impatient earlier today. I was not myself, and I really mean it because I know who I am by now.
And I just had to have a Java Chip (another word for a chocolaty drink with lots of cream and calories) with my friend Nura.
I don’t know if it was the delicious Java Chip or the blue dress I tried on, but I became satisfied. I stopped whining. And I forgot about London. I forgot that I am dying to see what’s outside of Virginia, that I’m dying to live in New York and write. I forgot and I’m still satisfied.
Maybe we just have to give it time and let things rest for a bit. Sometimes a little thing like a good drink helps. And sometimes it’s the friends who listen and know the right things to say.
Catching dreams
Two boys, between the ages of 10 and 11, are fishing. What an easy thing to want: a fish. Right now, a fish is satisfying to them. Once they get older, they’ll want more than a fishing pole. They’ll need more; they’ll ask for more.
I wish I wanted a fish instead of big, intangible dreams. Big dreams cost more. They weigh more and take more time. They make us insatiable, more than we need to be.
The boys continue to throw their poles in the lake. There is still no sign of fish.
If catching a fish is a possibility, then maybe bigger dreams could be too.
Can we catch bigger dreams? I think we can.
Take me away
The wind is taking me away tonight. Tonight, the wind is my friend, my companion. Tonight, I’m sitting alone, outside on a green, rocking chair. The wind blows quietly, whispering spring. Tonight is another Friday night and I’m not smiling. My mind is with the wind…it would be so much easier if I didn’t want anything, if I had no needs, no expectations, no fantasies…
When we forget to laugh
Children laugh at each other. They laugh when they see monkeys at the zoo or silly cartoon characters on t.v.
What do the grownups, the adults laugh at?
We laugh at ourselves. We laugh with sarcasm. We laugh out of pity sometimes, out of boredom, out of extreme fatigue, out of anger, out of sadness.
There are times when we remember how to really laugh, how to really enjoy the moment. We remember how we laughed at little things as children. We remember that we were once children.
We are no longer innocent when we grow up so we laugh to cover the guilt, the anger, the pity. Sometimes we don’t know why we laugh. Maybe we don’t need to know.
Children laugh with reason. They see and laugh. They do something and laugh. They haven’t forgotten that clowns are funny, that talking animals are funny, or that grownups are funny.
Have we then, forgotten everything?
Oblivion
How many times did I sigh today, how many times did I say “whatever”, how many times did I tell myself it’s all pointless, don’t get caught up in pointless matters?
I just want to sit here tonight, not think, not speak, just write. Write about what I want, what I care for, what I hate and I love. I just want to write without thinking of realities, or bigger pictures, or how it will affect my readers. I simply want to write. I don’t care for realities.
My ship has sunk tonight. I’m in a sea and I’m drowning. But this sea is calm, static. Yet, I’m still struggling, I’m still drowning…and I don’t know why.
This isn’t a losing battle. It’s not out of depression or pity. I just have to pour it out, the thoughts that are running in my head, the thoughts that I no longer care for and that I must somehow recycle.
How do you recycle your thoughts? How do you get rid of the internal waste that piles up in your own head?
I just want to sit here tonight, stare into nothing, be nothing, want nothing, know nothing.
I want nothingness, oblivion…
I’m tired of wanting, of caring, of being…
Selfish
I am selfish. I have desires and dreams that I refuse to give up. I can’t help it. I have to have what I want. Am I selfish then?
Where do we draw the line? When do we know we have to accept and move on? Why should we not want everything?
I hate these unimportant desires that cost so much, that waste my time, that make me desperate. But…I just can’t help it. Maybe I am selfish.
Just to say hello
I hate those moments, when I drive you to the airport, I had this feeling three times, I don’t like them at all, I always cried on the way back…
These are parting moments. Moments where you say good-bye, where you search for words but don’t have the energy to say them out loud.
I hate and love airports. I love hellos. I hate good-byes.
But I rather say hello and goodbye than not see you at all.
Transitory moments
We’re driving down Falls Church. The window is down, the sun is in my face, and Madonna is singing “American Life”. I look out the window and…
My brother and I are driving down to the Amsterdam airport. I have to head back to Washington and I know I don’t want to. Madonna is singing this song for the first time. The European roads are unfamiliar, yet welcoming. In fact, I prefer this unfamiliarity over the familiar streets of Virginia.
Why is it so hard to get back to the norm? Why is it so hard to go back to work, to school, and to the everyday drama of life? Why is it so easy to forget the drama?
As we get closer to the airport, I get a bad feeling inside. I don’t want to listen to Madonna anymore. I have to part from this transient moment of happiness and freedom.
Today when I heard this song again, I remembered the drive with my brother. I remembered, and I got a good feeling, like I could have that moment back…
Not getting used to it
He is smoking a cigarette outside on a bench. I’m setting up the tables. He’s staring out to the tennis court, I think. He takes a couple of puffs and comes back in. The doors open at 5 and dinner starts then.
We need breaks. Even at work we need a little quite time, a small break, some “me” time. A break could be a cigarette, a beer, or just a quite place to sit and think. Maybe not even think, just day-dream.
I hum to myself at times when I don’t have access to my iPod. It gives me a sense of normality and makes me feel at home. When I’m there, in the senior home, I get depressed. I see their faces and I think they deserve better. They deserve to be on vacation with their families. They don’t deserve to be alone. Nobody deserves to be alone.
I’ll be leaving in a week or so. I found another job. I didn’t want to leave them this fast, but I couldn’t stand it any longer. Maybe if I had found a good way to get used to the atmosphere or a better break-time, I would have stayed.
The power of being
Sometimes even the strong people cry; but that doesn’t mean they’re now weak.
I cried tonight because I felt sorry for myself, because I just wanted to cry, because my mother was right.
But I still think I can make my own decisions. I still think that as wise as she is, sometimes she can be wrong.
i hate disappointing her but i don’t like being unhappy either and i know my unhappiness will bring more damage.
so i will allow myself to make the decisions that I need to make. i will give myself that right.
im not broken just because i cried. i have grown stronger and now my tears don’t last that long anyway…
im going to make my own mistakes if they’re supposed to be mistakes
im going to take my own risks
im going to play this game
and Im gonna beat it
People will tell us where to go, how to live, how to be happy
People will always want to help
but they can’t define happiness for us…